vgl. this film features the commanding performance of Maurice Schwartz, often billed as „the greatest of all Yiddish actors“, or the „Olivier of the Yiddish stage.“, so bei cuny.edu
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vgl. Plakat The Jewish Radio Favorite und Schallplatten auf dem Brunswick-label; Brunswick 67 133-A: Jewish Comic Recitation Die Waiber’she Game (Women’s Game) ‘Rubin Goldberg, Komiker’; Brunswick 67 133-B: Jewish Comic Recitation Hikatch (The Stutterer) ‘Rubin Goldberg, Komiker’, aufgen. N.Y., 10. November 1928, vgl. Ross Laird S. 640, Etikett abgeb. bei ebayimg.com (abgerufen am 14. Februar 2016)
vgl. livingtradition (Memento vom 10. Februar 2011 im Internet Archive): “Zvee Scooler was born in Kamenets-Podolsk (now Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine) in 1899 and arrived in America with his family in 1912. By 1916 he made his first appearance on the stage—in an amateur Hebrew-language theatrical—and soon thereafter became a regular chorus member in Maurice Schwartz’s Yiddish Art Theatre. He appeared with all the major companies of the day, such as the Irving Place Theatre with Ludwig Satz and the Folks-Teater. His first English-language role came in 1926 in “We Americans” starring Edward G. Robinson (Paul Muni was also in the cast). He again appeared on Broadway in 1928 in a 29-performance dud called “The Command Performance,” after which he did not make a Broadway appearance until “Fiddler on the Roof” opened in 1964. He returned to Yiddish with an appearance in the 1932 film classic “Uncle Moses,” playing Charlie, the young love interest”.